Sunday Tribune
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Type | Sunday newspaper |
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Format | originally tabloid, now broadsheet |
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Owner(s) | Tribune Newspapers PLC |
Founded | 1980, closed 1982. Relaunched 1983. |
Political position | Left of Centre/Liberal |
Headquarters | 15 Baggot Street, Dublin 2 |
Editor | Nóirín Hegarty |
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Website | www.tribune.ie |
The Sunday Tribune is an broadsheet Irish Sunday newspaper published by Tribune Newspapers plc.
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[edit] Foundation, collapse & first relaunch
The newspaper was founded in 1980 by John Mulcahy as a tabloid with Conor Brady (later editor of The Irish Times) as its first editor. It was moderately successful but its growing financial stability (it had not yet made a profit but was moving it that direction) was undermined when its then owner Hugh McLoughlin, in 1982 launched the financially misjudged downmarket tabloid Daily News. The News proved to be a publishing disaster, with poor quality printing, bad distribution, and a misjudged content, and pulled its sister paper, the Tribune, down with it within weeks. The Tribune went into receivership. The title bought by Vincent Browne, who relaunched it as a broadsheet edited by him.
[edit] Second near collapse
The paper became one of Ireland's most successful newspapers in the 1980s, eating into the market of The Sunday Press, which like other Press titles was hæmoraging readers through underfunding, an aging market and poor management decisions. Replicating McLoughlin's mistake of a decade earlier, against advice Browne launched a new sister paper, the Dublin Tribune, which collapsed pulling the Sunday Tribune down with it. It was saved from backruptcy by Sir Anthony O'Reilly's's Independent News and Media (then called Independent Newspapers plc), which acquired a 29.9% stake in the company. Even before the investment the relationship between Browne and the board of the company had been fraught. In the aftermath of the Dublin Tribune debaclé he was sacked as editor.
Circulation & Readership of | |
Circulation | 71,187 |
Readership | 236,000 (7.2% of market) |
Dates | Jan—June 2005 |
Source | National Newspapers of Ireland |
Independent Newspapers then made an offer to increase its stake to a majority level, however the Minister for Industry and Commerce, Desmond O'Malley, blocked the takeover attempt in 1992. Despite this, it is believed by many Irish business journalists that Independent Newspapers effectively control the Tribune via a series of loans. Matt Cooper was the editor of the newspaper from 1996 to 2002. Though the future of the newspaper has long thought to be uncertain it has continued to survive in the increasingly competitive Irish newspaper market. Its survival was helped by the collapse of the Irish Press group, which removed its highly popular Sunday Press from the Sunday market. Though many of its readers would not necessarily have been politically close to the Sunday Tribune they were closer to it than the main other alternative, the Sunday Independent.
[edit] The Tribune today
It is often humourously referred to as "The Turbine", especially in the magazine "The Phoenix."
[edit] Competitors
The newspaper's main Irish broadsheet Sunday competitors are the Sunday Independent and the Sunday Business Post, as well as the Irish edition of the UK Sunday Times.
National & regional newspapers in Ireland | |
Currently existing |
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Defunct |
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See also: List of newspapers in Ireland |